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1977 DAVID ROSENFELD Associate Regional Director (DR-8646)
Attorney for Plaintiff SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION New York Regional Office 3 World Financial Center, Suite 400 New York, NY 10281 (212) 336-0153
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------x SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION,
CIVIL ACTION Plaintiff, FILE NO.
v.
AUTOMATED TRADING DESK SPECIALISTS, LLC,
Defendant. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------x
COMPLAINT
Plaintiff Securities and Exchange Commission ("Commission") alleges the following
against defendant Automated Trading Desk Specialists, LLC ("ATDS"):
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SUMMARY
1. This case concerns the failure of ATDS, a specialist firm, to meet its basic obligation
as a specialist to serve public customer orders over its own proprietary interests while executing
trades on the Chicago Stock Exchange ("CHX").
2. ATDS specialists operating on the CHX had a general duty to match executable
public customer or "agency" buy and sell orders and not to fill customer orders through a trade from
the specialist firm's own account when those customer orders could be matched with another
customer order. From January 1999 through 2004 (the "Relevant Period"), ATDS violated this
obligation by filling orders through proprietary trades rather than through other customer orders,
thereby causing customer orders to be disadvantaged by approximately $4.2 million.
3. Specifically, ATDS engaged in improper trades for its own proprietary accounts by
failing to match opposing buy and sell orders in the three following ways:
a. Trading Ahead. In certain instances, specialists at ATDS filled one agency order
through a proprietary trade for the firm's account while a matchable agency order was
present on the opposite side of the market, thereby improperly "trading ahead" of such
opposite-side executable agency order. The customer order that was traded ahead of
was then disadvantaged when it was subsequently executed at a price that was inferior to
the price received by the firm's proprietary account.
b. Interpositioning. In certain instances, after trading ahead, ATDS specialists also traded
proprietarily with the matchable opposite-side agency order that had been traded ahead
of, thereby "interpositioning" themselves between the two agency orders that should
have been paired off in the first instance. By participating on both sides of trades, the
specialist captured the spread between the purchase and sale prices, thereby
disadvantaging the other parties to the transactions.
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c. Trading Ahead ofUnexecuted Open or Cancelled Orders. In certain instances, ATDS
specialists traded ahead of opposite-side executable agency orders, as described in
paragraph 3(a) above, but in these instances, the unexecuted order was left open until the
end of the day, or was cancelled by the customer prior to the close of the trading day
before receiving an execution.
4. By engaging in the conduct described in paragraph 3 above, ATDS violated CHX
Article 9, Rule 17 (Personal Selling and Purchasing Prohibited) (fonnerly Article IX, Rule 5) and
CHX Article XXX, Rule 2 (Precedence to Orders in Book) (prior to its repeal effective September
29,2006).
5. Further, by failing to make or keep current a blotter containing an itemized daily
record of all purchases and sales of securities effected by ATDS for its proprietary accounts, ATDS
violated Section 17(a) ofthe Securities Exchange Act of 1934 ("Exchange Act"), 15 U.S.C. §
78q(a), and Rule 17a-3(a)(1) thereunder, 17 C.F.R. § 240.17a-3(a)(I).
NATURE OF THE PROCEEDINGS AND THE RELIEF SOUGHT
6. The Commission brings this action pursuant to the authority conferred upon it by
Sections 21(d), (e) and (t) of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.c. §§ 78u(d), (e) and (t), to enjoin ATDS
from violating provisions of the federal securities laws and several conduct rules in place on the
CHX. In addition, the Commission seeks other relief, including disgorgement and civil penalties.
STATUTES AND RULES ALLEGED TO HAVE BEEN VIOLATED
7. ATDS has engaged, and unless enjoined will continue to engage, directly or
indirectly, in acts, practices, or courses ofbusiness, that constitute violations ofCHX Article 9, Rule
17 (Personal Selling and Purchasing Prohibited) (fonnerly Article IX, Rule 5).
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8. ATDS has engaged, and unless enjoined will continue to engage, directly or
indirectly, in acts, practices, or courses of business, that constitute violations of Section 17(a) ofthe
Exchange Act, 15 U.s.c. § 78q(a)(l), and Rule 17a-3 thereunder, 17 C.F.R. § 240.17a-3.
JURISDICTION AND VENUE
9. This Court has jurisdiction over this action pursuant to Sections 21 (d), 21 (e) and 27
of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.c. §§ 78u(d), 78u(e) and 78aa.
10. Venue lies in this Court pursuant to Section 27 of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.c. §
78aa. Certain of the transactions, acts, practices and courses ofbusiness alleged herein occurred
within the jurisdiction ofthe United States District Court for the Southern District ofNew York. In
particular, certain of the violative transactions alleged herein were executed on the New York Stock
Exchange, a national stock exchange located in New York, New York.
11. ATDS, directly or indirectly, has made use of the means or instrumentalities of
interstate commerce, the means or instruments of transportation or communication in interstate
commerce, and/or the mails, in connection with the acts, practices and courses of business alleged
herein.
12. Unless enjoined, ATDS will continue to engage in the transactions, acts, practices
and courses of business set forth in this Complaint, and transactions, acts, practices and courses of
business similar in purport and object.
DEFENDANT
13. ATDS is a broker-dealer that was registered with the Commission pursuant to
Section 15(b) of the Exchange Act and was a member of the CHX from 2002 through 2004. ATDS
is an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of ATD Holdings, lnc..("ATD"). In June 2002, ATD,
through a wholly-owned subsidiary, acquired Chicago Securities Group, LLC ("CSG"), a broker
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dealer registered with the Commission pursuant to Section 15(b) of the Exchange Act and, from
June 2002, a member of the CHX. In September of2003, CSG changed its name to ATDS. Prior
to June 2002, CSG was a wholly owned subsidiary of Chicago Securities Group Holdings, Limited
Partnership.
FACTS
A. Obligations and Role of Specialists
14. On the CHX, specialist firms are responsible for the quality of the markets in the
securities in which individual specialists are registered. A specialist is expected to maintain, insofar
as is reasonably practicable, a "fair" and "orderly" market. A "fair" market, among other things,
affords no undue advantage to any participant. An "orderly" market is characterized by regular,
reliable operation, with price continuity and depth, in which price movements are accompanied by
appropriate volume, and unreasonable price variations between sales are avoided.
15. Specialists have two primary duties: performing their "negative obligation" to
execute customer orders at the most advantageous price with minimal dealer intervention, and
fulfilling their "affirmative obligation" to offset imbalances in supply and demand. Specialists
participate as both broker (or agent), absenting themselves from the market to pair executable
customer orders against each other, and as dealer (or principal), trading for the specialists' dealer or
proprietary accounts when needed to facilitate price continuity and fill customer orders when there
are no available contra parties to those orders.
16. Whether acting as brokers or dealers, specialists are required to hold the public's
interest above their own and, as such, are prohibited from trading for their dealers' accounts ahead
of pre-existing customer buy or sell orders that could be executed against each other.
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17. When matchable customer buy and sell orders are received by the specialists
generally delivered either through an exchange's order processing system to a specialist's terminal,
or, in limited circumstances, by floor brokers gathered in front of specialists' workstations ("the
crowd") - specialists are required to act as agent and cross or pair offthose orders and to abstain
from participating as principal or dealer.
B. Improper Proprietary Trading by ATDS
18. During the Relevant Period, ATDS breached its duty to refrain from dealing for its
own account while in possession of executable buy and sell customer orders. Instead, ATDS
effected improper proprietary trades that disadvantaged customer orders.
19. On the CHX, ATDS specialists possessed, or had access to, information concerning
customer orders on both sides ofthe market. Where there were matchable orders on both sides of
the market, specialists on the CHX were obligated to "pair off' or cross the buy and sell orders by
executing each side of the market for identical prices and in commensurate order quantities. In
numerous instances, however, ATDS specialists did not "pair off' or cross these matchable buy and
sell orders with each other. The violative conduct took three basic forms.
20. Trading Ahead. In certain instances, ATDS specialists filled one agency order
through a proprietary trade for the firm's account while a matchable agency order was present on
the opposite side of the market, thereby improperly "trading ahead" of such opposite-side
executable agency order. The customer order that was traded ahead of was then disadvantaged
when it was subsequently executed at a price that was inferior to the price received by the firm's
proprietary account.
21. For example, if a specialist has present on his book, at the same time, a marketable
customer order to buy 1,000 shares of a security and a marketable customer order to sell 1,000
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shares of the same security, the specialist would be obligated to pair offthose matchable orders.
Trading ahead would occur if the specialist filled the sell order from the finn's proprietary account
at $25.00 per share, and then subsequently executed the buy order at the inferior price of$25.05 per
share. In this example, the buy order received a price inferior to that which it was entitled ($25.00)
and the customer was disadvantaged by $50.00 (1,000 shares x $0.05 per share).
22. Interpositioning. In certain instances, after trading ahead, ATDS specialists also
traded proprietarily with the matchable opposite-side agency order that had been traded ahead of,
thereby "interpositioning" themselves between the two agency orders that should have been paired
off in the first instance. By participating on both sides of trades, the specialist captured the spread
between the purchase and sale prices, thereby disadvantaging the other parties to the transactions.
23. Alternatively, specialists sometimes sold shares of a security into a customer buy
order, and then filled the customer sell order by buying for the finn's proprietary account at a lower
price. In either case, the specialists participated on both sides of trades, capturing the spread
between the purchase and sale prices, and disadvantaging the other parties to the transaction.
24. Trading Ahead ofUnexecuted Open or Cancelled Orders. In certain instances,
ATDS specialists traded ahead of an executable agency order, as described above in paragraphs 20
and 21, but the unexecuted agency order was left open until the end of the trading day, or was
cancelled by the customer prior to the close of the trading day before receiving an execution.
25. During the Relevant Period, ATDS engaged in tens of thousands ofviolative trades
of the three types described above, resulting in overall customer disadvantage of approximately $4.2
million. The majority of this customer disadvantage relates to violative trading that occurred
between 1999 and 2002.
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C. ATDS' Books and Records Violations
26. During the Relevant Period, ATDS failed to make or keep current a blotter
containing an itemized daily record of all purchases and sales of securities effected by it for its
proprietary accounts.
27. Specifically, ATDS sometimes received orders to buy or sell securities that are
dually listed on the CHX and on a different exchange, such as the New York Stock Exchange
("NYSE"). In order to fill these orders, the specialist would sometimes place a corresponding order
(a "lay-off trade") on the NYSE for the firm's proprietary account. With respect to lay-off
transactions, ATDS failed to make or keep current records showing the account for which each such
transaction was effected, the name and amount of the securities, the unit and aggregate purchase or
sale price, and the trade date.
FIRST CLAIM FOR RELIEF
Violations of Chicago Stock Exchange Article 9, Rule 17 (Personal Selling and Purchasing Prohibited)
28. The Commission repeats and realleges the allegations contained in paragraphs 1
through 27 by reference as if fully set forth herein.
29. During the Relevant Period, CHX Article 9, Rule 17 (formerly known as Article IX,
Rule 5) prohibited a specialist from trading for his own account while holding an unexecuted
customer market or marketable limit order for the same security, on the same side of the market.
30. As alleged above, ATDS bought or initiated the purchase of, and sold or initiated the
sale of, securities on the CHX for its own account while holding unexecuted, marketable customer
orders on the same side of the book.
31. By reason of the foregoing, ATDS, directly or indirectly, has violated and, unless
permanently enjoined, will continue to violate CHX Article 9, Rule 17.
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SECOND CLAIM FOR RELIEF
Violations of Section 17(a) of the'Exchange Act, and Rule 17a-3 Thereunder (Books and Records)
32. The Commission repeats and realleges the allegations contained in paragraphs 1
through 27 by reference as if fully set forth herein.
33. During the Relevant Period, ATDS failed to make or keep current for prescribed
periods of time a blotter containing an itemized daily record of all purchases and sales of securities
effected by ATDS for its proprietary accounts.
34. Specifically, with respect to purchases and sales of securities made by ATDS for its
proprietary accounts on stock exchanges other than the CHX, ATDS failed to make or keep current
records showing the account for which each such transaction was effected, the name and amount of
the securities, the unit and aggregate purchase or sale price, and the trade date.
35. By reason of the foregoing, ATDS, directly or indirectly, has violated and, unless
pennanently enjoined, will continue to violate Section 17(a) of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.c. §
78q(a), and Rule 17a-3(a)(1) thereunder, 17 c.F.R. § 240.17a-3(a)(1).
PRAYER FOR RELIEF
WHEREFORE, Plaintiff Commission respectfully requests that this Court enter an
Order:
I.
Pennanently restraining and enjoining ATDS, directly or indirectly, from violating CHX
Article 9, Rule 17 and Section 17(a) ofthe Exchange Act and Rule 17a-3 thereunder;
II.
Directing ATDS to disgorge the ill-gotten gains obtained from its conduct;
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III.
Requiring ATDS to pay a civil penalty pursuant to Section 21(d) of the Exchange Act, 15
U.S.c. § 78u(d); and
IV.
Granting such other and further relief as the Court may deem just and appropriate.
Dated: New York, New York March 4,2009
Respectfully Submitted,
'!)~~~ David Rosenfeld (DR-8646) Attorney for Plaintiff SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION New Yark Regional Office 3 World Financial Center, Suite 400 New York, NY 10281 (212) 336-0153
Of Counsel:
Sanjay Wadhwa ([email protected] ) John Henderson ([email protected] ) Andrew Michaelson ([email protected] )
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